800 FSB?

T

tim

I am quite sure that my board supports 800 megahertz FSB but it is listed at
200.
How do I change this? Will I notice a difference?

Intel Corporation D865GBF
Bus Clock: 200 megahertz
2.40 gigahertz Intel Pentium 4
8 kilobyte primary memory cache
512 kilobyte secondary memory cache

512 Megabytes Installed Memory

Slot 'J6G1' has 256 MB
Slot 'J6G2' is Empty
Slot 'J6H1' has 256 MB
Slot 'J6H2' is Empty

If I should be asking on another newsgroup please direct me and my apology.
 
B

BR549

Any changes to the motherboard clock speed is done in the bios. The
motherboard clock is quad pumped meaning the only place you can go is down.
That's how a 100mhz clock becomes a 400 fsb, 133 becomes 533 and 200 is an
800 fsb.
You can read more about it here
http://www.gen-x-pc.com/fsb_info.htm


I am quite sure that my board supports 800 megahertz FSB but it is listed at
200.
How do I change this? Will I notice a difference?

Intel Corporation D865GBF
Bus Clock: 200 megahertz
2.40 gigahertz Intel Pentium 4
8 kilobyte primary memory cache
512 kilobyte secondary memory cache

512 Megabytes Installed Memory

Slot 'J6G1' has 256 MB
Slot 'J6G2' is Empty
Slot 'J6H1' has 256 MB
Slot 'J6H2' is Empty

If I should be asking on another newsgroup please direct me and my apology.
 
J

Jim Macklin

Intel mobos detect the CPU id and auto-set the FSB, if your
CPU supports 400 MHz, changing to a faster CPU will change
to 533 or 800 if that is what can be supported. Intel does
not want their products over-clocked. If you want to
over-clock an Intel CPU, you need a mobo from a third-party
that will allow you to over-ride the Intel BIOS settings.

I don't think any of the 2.4 GHz CPUs support faster than
533. To get 800 FSB, you need a new CPU.


--
The people think the Constitution protects their rights;
But government sees it as an obstacle to be overcome.


| Any changes to the motherboard clock speed is done in the
bios. The
| motherboard clock is quad pumped meaning the only place
you can go is down.
| That's how a 100mhz clock becomes a 400 fsb, 133 becomes
533 and 200 is an
| 800 fsb.
| You can read more about it here
| http://www.gen-x-pc.com/fsb_info.htm
|
| |
| I am quite sure that my board supports 800 megahertz FSB
but it is listed at
| 200.
| How do I change this? Will I notice a difference?
|
| Intel Corporation D865GBF
| Bus Clock: 200 megahertz
| 2.40 gigahertz Intel Pentium 4
| 8 kilobyte primary memory cache
| 512 kilobyte secondary memory cache
|
| 512 Megabytes Installed Memory
|
| Slot 'J6G1' has 256 MB
| Slot 'J6G2' is Empty
| Slot 'J6H1' has 256 MB
| Slot 'J6H2' is Empty
|
| If I should be asking on another newsgroup please direct
me and my apology.
|
|
|
 
S

SlowJet

I am on an Intel865BGF with 800 fsb, Intel Extremme Graphics 2, a Pent 2.4c
HT, using dynamic paging --- And the thing that makes it all work is DDR400
memory in the dual channel bus, first slot of each bank. I am using Micron
from Critical 512MB each.

If you haven't updated the BIOS do so (There has been 22 versions) and all
the drivers for the board, sound, and video.

During the post screen it says what is happing, 2,4c 800 Dymanic paging, 800
FSB

I was just checking the 3.4E and it will run on the BGF with the lastest INF
driver installed.

SJ
 
S

SlowJet

The CPU has to be a C version to be HT.
The 200 maybe a reflexion of memory speed / type.

DDR400 = PC333 speed (333 single, effective 320 ; 320 dual, effective 400)
 
S

SlowJet

ops, that s/b

DDR400 = PC3200 speed (333 single, effective 320 ; 320 dual, effective 400)
 

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